Ian MacKenzie (Mythic Masculine): The Lost Boys of the Manosphere

Life is a Festival #182

 

Today on Life is a Festival, Ian MacKenzie and I unpack “Inside the Manosphere” the performance, the status games, the Lamborghinis that need to be witnessed to exist.

We trace it back to father absence, the failure of the nuclear family, and generations of uninitiated men. We explore the distinction between grief and grievance, asking why male pain so readily converts into domination rather than surrender. MacKenzie shares his own four-year cycle of wilderness vigils, sits of four days without food or water, as a counter-image to the Manosphere's hollow heroism, describing initiation not as a heroic feat but as a devastating encounter with one's own smallness. The conversation moves through the crisis of young male loneliness, the complicity of wellness culture in creating the pipeline, and lands on eros and queerness as unexpected antidotes, arguing that the manosphere's deepest poverty is its total absence of genuine intimacy, play, and erotic aliveness.

Ian MacKenzie is a filmmaker, writer, and host of the Mythic Masculine Podcast, which explores modern masculinity through the lens of myth, ritual, and culture-making. He is the co-director of The Village of Lovers, a documentary about the intentional community of Tamera in Portugal, and writes on Substack under The Deep Masculine. He is co-facilitating the inaugural Cascadia Men's Conference later this year near Vancouver, Canada, inspired by the 40-year-old Minnesota Men's Conference founded by Robert Bly.

Timestamps:

  • (05:19) Why Myth Matters

  • (12:22) The Manosphere as Hyperobject

  • (22:17) Nuclear Family vs the Village

  • (28:24) Women as Status Props

  • (35:34) Status Scarcity Hierarchy

  • (37:38) Tamara Village 

  • (46:11)  Crisis of Uninitiated Boys

  • (51:02) Ian’s Wilderness Vigil Initiation

  • (01:02:12) Eros Queerness Integration

Links:

 

Graphics Designed by Gehno Sanchez Aviance

Audio Engineering by Trevor Coulter

Theme song ““Peculiar Colors” [Manjumasi]“ by dj atish